The 1924–25 WCHL season was the fourth season for the Western Canada Hockey League. With the collapse of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA), two teams, the Vancouver Maroons and Victoria Cougars joined the WCHL. Six teams played 28 games each.

Teams

edit
1924–25 Western Canada Hockey League
Team City Arena Capacity
Calgary Tigers Calgary, Alberta Victoria Arena N/A
Edmonton Eskimos Edmonton, Alberta Edmonton Stock Pavilion 2,000
Regina Capitals Regina, Saskatchewan Regina Stadium N/A
Saskatoon Crescents Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Crescent Arena N/A
Vancouver Maroons Vancouver, British Columbia Denman Arena 10,500
Victoria Cougars Victoria, British Columbia Patrick Arena 4,000

Map of teams

edit
  WCHL Teams

Regular season

edit

Final standings

edit

Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF= Goals For, GA = Goals Against, Pts = Points

Western Canada Hockey League GP W L T Pts GF GA
Calgary Tigers 28 17 11 0 34 95 79
Saskatoon Crescents 28 16 11 1 33 102 75
Victoria Cougars 28 16 12 0 32 84 63
Edmonton Eskimos 28 14 13 1 29 97 109
Vancouver Maroons 28 12 16 0 24 91 102
Regina Capitals 28 8 20 0 16 72 121

Playoffs

edit

League championship

edit
Bracket
Semi-finalFinal
          
Calgary Tigers101
Victoria Cougars123
Saskatoon Crescents134
Victoria Cougars336
Semi-final

The Victoria Cougars defeated the Saskatoon Crescents in the WCHL semi-final.

Date Away Score Home Score
March 6 Saskatoon 1 Victoria 3
March 10 Victoria 3 Saskatoon 3
Victoria wins two-game, total-goals series 6–4

Source: Coleman(1966)[1]

Final

The Victoria Cougars then defeated the Calgary Tigers in the WCHL final.

Date Away Score Home Score
March 14 Victoria 1 Calgary 1
March 18 Calgary 0 Victoria 2
Victoria wins two-game, total-goals series 3–1

Source: Coleman(1966)[2]

Stanley Cup Finals

edit

The Victoria Cougars faced the National Hockey League champion Montreal Canadiens in a best-of-5 series for the Stanley Cup. Victoria defeated Montreal, 3 games to 1, marking the only time since the inception of the NHL in 1917 that the NHL champion did not win the Cup and the final time this would happen.

Date Away Score Home Score
March 21 Montreal Canadiens 2 Victoria Cougars 5
March 23 Montreal Canadiens 1 Victoria Cougars 3
March 27 Montreal Canadiens 4 Victoria Cougars 2
March 30 Montreal Canadiens 1 Victoria Cougars 6

Source: Coleman(1966)[3]

Player statistics

edit

Scoring leaders

edit
Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Mickey MacKay Vancouver Maroons 28 27 6 33 17
Harry Oliver Calgary Tigers 24 20 13 33 23
Duke Keats Edmonton Eskimos 28 23 9 32 63
Bill Cook Saskatoon Crescents 27 22 10 32 79
Frank Fredrickson Victoria Cougars 28 22 8 30 43
Frank Boucher Vancouver Maroons 27 16 12 28 6
Archie Briden Edmonton Eskimos 28 17 6 23 33
Bullet Joe Simpson Edmonton Eskimos 28 11 12 23 16
George Hay Regina Capitals 20 16 6 22 6
Bun Cook Saskatoon Crescents 28 18 3 21 48

Goaltending averages

edit
Name Club GP GA SO Avg.
Hap Holmes Victoria 28 63 3 2.3
George Hainsworth Saskatoon 28 75 2 2.7
Hugh Lehman Vancouver 11 30 2.7
Hal Winkler Calgary 28 80 2 2.9
Hec Fowler Edmonton 8 29 1 3.6
Bill Tobin Edmonton 3 12 4.0
Herb Stuart Edmonton 17 68 1 4.0
Charlie Reid Vancouver 17 72 1 4.4
Red McCusker Regina 28 123 4.4

Source: Coleman(1966)[4]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Coleman 1966, pp. 480–481.
  2. ^ Coleman 1966, pp. 481–482.
  3. ^ Coleman 1966, pp. 482–483.
  4. ^ Coleman 1966, p. 478.
  • Coleman, Charles (1966). The Trail of the Stanley Cup, Vol. 1, 1893–1936 inc.
edit
Preceded by WCHL seasons
1924–25
Succeeded by